Given this HTML and CSS:
span { display:inline-block; width:100px; background-color:palevioletred; }
<p> <span> Foo </span> <span> Bar </span> </p>
As a result, there will be a 4 pixel wide space between the SPAN elements.
Demo: http://jsfiddle.net/dGHFV/
I understand why this happens, and I also know that I could get rid of that space by removing the white-space between the SPAN elements in the HTML source code, like so:
<p> <span> Foo </span><span> Bar </span> </p>
However, I was hoping for a CSS solution that doesn't require the HTML source code to be tampered with.
I know how to solve this with JavaScript - by removing the text nodes from the container element (the paragraph), like so:
// jQuery $('p').contents().filter(function() { return this.nodeType === 3; }).remove();
Demo: http://jsfiddle.net/dGHFV/1/
But can this issue be solved with CSS alone?
How do I remove space after paragraph in HTML? margin : 0 : This will remove space between two paragraphs. padding : 0 : This will remove space between the border and text of each paragraph. line-height : 20px : This will decrease spacing between different lines in each paragraph.
apply float:left and that will remove the space so the text doesn't have to be on 1 line.
Answer: Remove space between the elementsThe CSS display property with the value inline-block is very useful for controlling the dimensions as well as the margin and padding of the inline elements.
Use the line-height property in CSS to do so. Browsers by default will create a certain amount of space between lines to ensure that the text is easily readable. For example, for 12-point type, a browser will place about 1 point of vertical space between lines.
For CSS3 conforming browsers there is white-space-collapsing:discard
see: http://www.w3.org/TR/2010/WD-css3-text-20101005/#white-space-collapsing
Alternatively, you should now use flexbox to achieve many of the layouts that you may previously have used inline-block for: https://css-tricks.com/snippets/css/a-guide-to-flexbox/
Since this answer has become rather popular, I'm rewriting it significantly.
Let's not forget the actual question that was asked:
How to remove the space between inline-block elements? I was hoping for a CSS solution that doesn't require the HTML source code to be tampered with. Can this issue be solved with CSS alone?
It is possible to solve this problem with CSS alone, but there are no completely robust CSS fixes.
The solution I had in my initial answer was to add font-size: 0
to the parent element, and then declare a sensible font-size
on the children.
http://jsfiddle.net/thirtydot/dGHFV/1361/
This works in recent versions of all modern browsers. It works in IE8. It does not work in Safari 5, but it does work in Safari 6. Safari 5 is nearly a dead browser (0.33%, August 2015).
Most of the possible issues with relative font sizes are not complicated to fix.
However, while this is a reasonable solution if you specifically need a CSS only fix, it's not what I recommend if you're free to change your HTML (as most of us are).
This is what I, as a reasonably experienced web developer, actually do to solve this problem:
<p> <span>Foo</span><span>Bar</span> </p>
Yes, that's right. I remove the whitespace in the HTML between the inline-block elements.
It's easy. It's simple. It works everywhere. It's the pragmatic solution.
You do sometimes have to carefully consider where whitespace will come from. Will appending another element with JavaScript add whitespace? No, not if you do it properly.
Let's go on a magical journey of different ways to remove the whitespace, with some new HTML:
<ul> <li>Item 1</li> <li>Item 2</li> <li>Item 3</li> </ul>
You can do this, as I usually do:
<ul> <li>Item 1</li><li>Item 2</li><li>Item 3</li> </ul>
http://jsfiddle.net/thirtydot/dGHFV/1362/
Or, this:
<ul> <li>Item 1</li ><li>Item 2</li ><li>Item 3</li> </ul>
Or, use comments:
<ul> <li>Item 1</li><!-- --><li>Item 2</li><!-- --><li>Item 3</li> </ul>
Or, if you are using using PHP or similar:
<ul> <li>Item 1</li><? ?><li>Item 2</li><? ?><li>Item 3</li> </ul>
Or, you can even skip certain closing tags entirely (all browsers are fine with this):
<ul> <li>Item 1 <li>Item 2 <li>Item 3 </ul>
Now that I've gone and bored you to death with "one thousand different ways to remove whitespace, by thirtydot", hopefully you've forgotten all about font-size: 0
.
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With